* Gustav weakens to Category 2
* Most U.S. Gulf oil output, nine refineries shut
* Iran says $100 a barrel lowest acceptable price
(Updates prices, Gustav details, adds OPEC survey)
By Matthew Robinson
LONDON, Sept 1 (Reuters) - Oil plunged more than $4 on Monday as concerns that Hurricane Gustav would cause severe damage to the U.S. oil sector eased as the storm weakened off the Louisiana coast.
Gustav -- which forced the shutdown of nine refineries and most U.S. offshore Gulf of Mexico oil production -- weakened to a Category 2 storm as it approached the coast near Port Fourchon, Louisiana, a key logistical port that supports 75 percent of Gulf of Mexico drilling operations. [
]For a graph on the projected path of Gustav, please click on: https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/STRM_GUSTAVU2.gif
U.S. crude <CLc1> fell $4.19 to $111.27 a barrel by 1429 GMT as markets discounted the potential damage from the storm, which had earlier been forecast to hit the United States as a Category 4 storm. Trade in the United States was shut due to the U.S. Labor Day holiday.
London Brent crude fell $4.31 to $109.74 a barrel.
"It looks like Gustav is not going to be as strong a storm as the market had feared," said Phil Flynn of Alaron Trading in Chicago. "There is a belief that this storm is not going to do much damage, that we are going to be able to get through this and not miss a beat and continue our downward move."
At least 12.5 percent of total U.S. refining capacity was shut down ahead of the storm and other plants cut rates. The Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the only U.S. port capable of offloading the biggest oil tankers, halted all operations.
Gustav is the biggest threat to the region -- home to a quarter of U.S. oil output and 15 percent of natural gas output -- since Hurricanes Katrina and Rita wrecked more than 100 offshore oil platforms in 2005 and closed several large refineries for months.
Nearly 2 million people fled the Louisiana coast and more than 11 million residents in five U.S. states were threatened by the storm. [
]The NYMEX declared force majeure on all delivery obligations under its August and September natural gas futures after ports and the Henry Hub delivery point were shuttered.
OPEC, RUSSIA
Iran's oil minister said on Sunday $100 a barrel was the lowest acceptable price for crude. Iran, OPEC's second-largest producer, has said the oil market is oversupplied as prices have dropped from the record high over $147 a barrel struck in July.
OPEC meets in Vienna on Sept. 9 to discuss output policy, but other member nations have backed Iran so far. Venezuela and Ecuador said on Friday they expect the oil exporters' group to maintain current output levels.
The group increased oil supply for a fourth consecutive month in August, mainly due to higher output from Iran and smaller hikes from Nigeria and Angola, a Reuters survey showed. [
]Traders are also eyeing tensions between Russia and the West, after Kremlin leader Dmitry Medvedev said on Sunday that Russia does not want a confrontation with the West but will hit back if attacked.
The European Union will warn Russia on Monday that Moscow's future ties with the bloc could depend on its adhering fully to a peace deal to end the Georgia conflict, according to a draft statement obtained by Reuters at a summit in Brussels. [
]Russia, the top natural gas exporter and the No. 2 oil exporter, supplies more than a quarter of Europe's gas needs. (Additional reporting by Fayen Wong in Perth; editing by Anthony Barker)